An Evening at Yale with Ayaan Hirsi Ali

 

Last evening I attended a lecture at Yale sponsored by the William F. Buckley Program (its goal being to promote intellectual diversity at the school) and delivered by Ayaan Hirsi Ali, currently a fellow at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard. I’d been unaware of the scheduled lecture until reading about a controversy triggered by an open letter from Yale’s Muslim Student Association (MSA) which denounced the invitation to Hirsi Ali because of her alleged history of hate speech and intolerance. The letter backfired on the MSA when a number of the 35 other Yale student groups it claimed had endorsed the letter stated that they had done no such thing.

Although the MSA action received both local media and political blog coverage, there were no protestors outside the lecture hall tonight (though there was a Fox News Channel truck) and the audience, which contained Muslim students, was orderly.

The evening consisted of a one-hour talk by Hirsi Ali followed by 30 minutes of Q&A which was limited to questions submitted in writing by the audience. Because the topics discussed by Ali in her lecture titled “The Clash of Civilizations: Islam versus the West” are germane to several recent threads on Ricochet, I thought I’d present this selection of my notes on her talk. I have not tried to organize it or put my own interpretation on her remarks. Any personal comments of my own will be clearly noted.

The Lecture

She complimented the President of Yale for his recent statements in support of free speech and contrasted it with Brandeis University’s decision to rescind her award of an honorary degree last spring.

She spoke of the Brandeis incident and other commencement fiascos at the same time and said they involved two phenomenon. The first, which she called self-inflicted, an excessive focus on any controversial or potentially offensive (to someone) speakers and second, in her case, the problem with Islam to listen to any criticism which she said takes advantage of the first concern.

She referenced the kidnapping of young girls by Boko Haram and said that we in the West show too much restraint in our response. However, she praised the West’s use of diplomatic pressure to free the Sudanese woman who converted to Christianity.

She spoke about ISIS and said “I do not blame the President for showing restraint” and then said we need to finally figure out how we are fighting and what we are fighting. Yes, we can militarily take-out the ISIS leadership but what will we do about the next group, for there will be a next group.

It was significant that the United Arab Emirates ambassador to the U.S. last week wrote in a Wall Street Journal op-ed denouncing “Islamic extremism,” a term she said the Arab states had previously avoided. She called it “a good step forward.”

We need to broaden the tools and methods to deal with this threat beyond just military action and surveillance.

She then moved to her broader themes. First she took on those who attacked her for a lack of academic credentials and questioned why her experiences are relevant. [My comment: You may find this unbelievable since the Left routinely elevates those with “authentic” experience as ones we simply must listen to, but when it is someone they don’t like, they are dismissed on those grounds.]

In response, she moved to what I thought the most powerful part of her talk. She pointed out what happened to those well credentialed religious academics in Muslim societies who dissented in even minor ways from the historic teachings of Islam. She ran through a list of 20th century Muslim academics who were exiled, forced to divorce their wives, recant and, in some cases, executed.

She then spoke at length about her own experience growing up in East Africa. Her family and community were Muslim but she described it as an Islam that “if you neglected some teachings you were left alone.” There was not hostility between Sunni and Shiite and they got on well with their Christian neighbors. She added they did hate the Jews, but then again they never met any. She said many Muslims, then and now, are “peaceful, loving people.”

This changed when she was 15 and a certain teacher (she referred to him as the Preacher Teacher) arrived in their village. He had been trained somewhere in the Middle East, perhaps Saudi Arabia or Egypt, and he preached intolerance and a language new to their ears. He introduced the concepts of jihad and martyrdom, the subordinate role of women and the need to aspire to kill all Jews (not just those in Israel).

This, Ali emphasized, is the indoctrination process that it overlooked. It must be addressed because this is “the cancer.” These preachers are not just active in the Muslim world; they are here in the U.S. and U.K. [My comment:  She never said anything about how to address this]

She then said that there is only one Islam but several different kinds of Muslims.

The first are the Preacher Teachers who focus on a core of Islam (submission to Allah) and preach hatred and intolerance along with their followers.

The second, whom she said are the majority of Muslims, are in cognitive dissonance.  They are horrified by and condemn the atrocities carried out by the first group in the name of Islam but they still believe in core Islamic beliefs.

The final group are the small minority of reformists and dissidents. Ali places herself in the latter category. She defined the dissidents as those who when confronted by a conflict between their conscience and the core creed of Islam choose their conscience.

She closed by addressing some questions to the Muslim students in the audience. These included:

Why don’t you spend your time protesting the Preacher Teachers and their intolerance instead of protesting against people like me?

Why don’t Muslims protest against the image of the Koran sandwiched between two Kalashnikovs (the banner of Boko Haram)?

Why are Muslims silent about the murder of others by the intolerant ones (whether members of different Islamic sects or those of other faiths)?

She ended by saying that every day there is a headline that forces Muslims to chose between conscience and creed.

Q&A

Is there too much focus on Islamic extremism? What about colonialism and the evils of the West?

Colonialism is not unique to the Muslim world. The Vietnamese and most African states were colonized but they are not waging jihad in response. She also reminded the audience that Islam itself once was a colonial empire.

In response to another question (don’t have details in my notes) she again mentioned that using military means may be a necessity but our tools need to be broadened.

In response to a question about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, she mentioned she had come across Palestinians who sincerely want a state that will co-exist peacefully with Israel but a second group see this as a religious war regardless of how the boundaries might be drawn. She said the first group was in the minority but she hopes that in light of the other regional threats that the Arab nations might empower this group to seek a real peace.

The last question was why are these problems of extremism in Islam an indictment of the entire religion. In her response she makes it clear that any “unreformed” religion is potentially a threat and said that in the West this reform had happened (she mentioned that even the Vatican had to make reforms in recent decades). She mentioned visiting the Salem Witch Museum and seeing the texts used to condemn people for sorcery. She said that’s where unreformed religions belong, in the museum. The problem with Islam is that it is still in the 7th century and that increasing numbers of Muslims view the Koran and hadiths as a driving manual.

The dissidents and reformers must be empowered and must push for doctrinal change in Islam.  She pointed out that the huge demonstrations in Eqypt overthrowing the Muslim Brotherhood were opposing the imposition of Sharia law as were the 2009 demonstrators in Iran.

She made three final remarks:

Reminded us that her community had no interest in jihad until the arrival of the Preacher Teacher.

We should not be in bed with the Saudis who spread intolerance.

“A world not led by America will be a really bad place to live in.”

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  1. EThompson Member
    EThompson
    @

    Ansonia:Thank you for this excellent report, Mark.By the time my husband and I got there to hear her (6:55) the line was almost to the Fox news truck. Then a man in a suit made it clear the room in which she would be speaking was already packed and there was no way we’d be getting in. Most people continued to stand in line after he told us this the first time.

    I had a similar experience at the New York Y; security was so tight (the fatwa thing) that many people waiting in line for a seat and later for the book-signing event were turned away. I’m not the least bit ashamed to say that “profiling” worked for me- this small, innocuous looking blonde woman waltzed right through all the lines. :)

    • #31
  2. Hydrogia Inactive
    Hydrogia
    @Hydrogia

    It is long past time for everyone to start listening very carefully to these women, These are the best women on earth.

    http://ayaanhirsiali.org/

    http://video.search.yahoo.com/search/video;_ylt=A0SO8zVC.xhUKf4AsuBXNyoA;_ylu=X3oDMTB0amIzbDNoBHNlYwNzYwRjb2xvA2dxMQR2dGlkA1NNRTQyMV8x?p=nonie+darwish+muslim

    http://www.actforamerica.org/

    http://pamelageller.com/

    • #32
  3. user_75648 Thatcher
    user_75648
    @JohnHendrix

    Thank you for this account, Mark.  Valuable.

    • #33
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